Sateliot is the great Spanish hope to have its own voice in the new satellite space race

There is a new space race and no one wants to miss it. Rivaling with Starlink seems like a utopia, but a Spanish company has managed to get ahead to the American giant on a specific point: 5G. While Elon Musk’s satellite company remains anchored in 4G, Sateliot boasts of being a pioneer in offering 5G connectivity from space, not only to IoT devices, but also to conventional mobile phones.

This milestone has not gone unnoticed by the governments of Spain and Europe. Sateliot brings together all the ingredients to become an option for technological sovereignty in the satellite race. A race where Starlink dominates with more than 90% of global launches, but where any advance of its own is seen as a great victory.

Now Sateliot inaugurates the Europe’s first 5G satellite development center. A pioneering center located in Barcelona that has more than 100 employees, two laboratories, a control room and a clean room of more than 100 square meters. From Xataka we have visited the center of the Catalan satellite company and learned about its ambitious plans.

Triton, the new generation of satellites moves to full 5G

Since 2018, Sateliot has launched six satellites, the last four in orbit since August 2024. They plan to launch five more next year. However, beyond getting ahead with 5Git will be with their second generation of satellites when they will begin to have a more competitive service.

Triton, in homage to the Montseny amphibian, is the name chosen for its new satellites, about four meters long and 150 kilograms in weight. These new satellites represent a radical advance compared to those already sent by Sateliot, because in addition to having a capacity up to 16 times greater, they also change their concept. Tritón not only offers connectivity to IoT devices, but will offer 5G connectivity for data, voice and video to conventional 5G mobiles. Without the need to add any antenna or modifications to these phones and compatible with all operators (3GPP).

The satellite, with a cost 10 times higher than the first generation, will allow Sateliot to offer a service that will range from critical security applications to civil protection and defense. The company explains that its satellite connection service will not focus on providing specific coverage to specific consumersbut serve for industrial, maritime, energy or location applications.

Sateliot Map 4 Satellites
Sateliot Map 4 Satellites

Jaume Sanpera, CEO of Sateliot, together with the monitoring of its four satellites in orbit

The first Triton satellite is scheduled to launch during the first quarter of 2027from Vandenberg (California), one of SpaceX’s two launch bases. The future goal is to be able to use European launchers, such as the Vega and Ariane of the European Space Agency.

In this space race, the dates given are no coincidence. 2027 is the date on which it is also planned that Starlink begins upgrading its satellites to 5G.

Barcelona bets on aerospace technology

Jaume SanperaCEO of Sateliot, is proud that his satellites are “100% manufactured in Barcelona.” Now they have inaugurated the development center, but in the future they plan for the industrial phase to also have a factory in Barcelona. A phase that is still far away.

“Next year we will exceed 200 employees. Being more than 80% engineers and having doubled the staff in the last year,” Sanpera explains to Xataka. “We have agreed to expand to the ground floor,” he points out in reference to the recently inaugurated offices.

An inauguration that was also attended by multiple public authorities, including the president of the Generalitat of Catalonia, Salvador Illa. “You have to lose your shyness. Everything outside is better and seems to come from the US or China. Well no: Here we also do very powerful things that no one else has“Illa defended.

White Room
White Room

Salvador Illa, president of the Generalitat of Catalonia, visits the clean room of the new 5G satellite development center | Satellite

Sateliot is a startup that currently brings together much of what Europe is looking for: cutting-edge technology companies and local development. The new development center wants to become the base of a cluster of aerospace companies in Barcelona. And investors are taking note.

Sanpera assures that at this time Sateliot is not looking for a new round, although defines it as a company “that requires a lot of capital”. Last March, the The Spanish government announced an investment of around 14 million euros in Sateliotfor a total of a round of about 70 million euros. In addition to the Spanish Society for Technological Transformation (SETT), Global Portfolio Investments, Indra, Cellnex and SEPIDES have also invested and 30 million euros have been loaned from the European Investment Bank (EIB). For the moment, since his birth They have invested about 50 million euros in R&D.

According to Sateliot, they already have signed contracts worth 285 million euros annually and offer coverage in 58 different countries. In total 734 different contracts to connect a total of 10 million devices that cannot have good coverage and where the satellite service opens a whole field of possibilities.

Control Room
Control Room

The new development center in Barcelona employs 110 employees (80% engineers), with plans to exceed 200 in 2026.

“We have 30 different patent applications“, they explain to us. During the explanation of how satellite monitoring works, the CEO of Sateliot hints that not all of its advances have been patented, in order to “not give clues to the competition”, pointing out that there is a high level of industrial espionage in the sector.

“The difficulty is in the radio, in the antenna,” says Sanpera. Sateliot cannot compete against Starlink in quantity, but unlike the American company, they are betting on satellites whose connectivity is more modern and, above all, widely compatible.

The Triton satellites have a 7 year shelf lifecompared to four or five years for the first generation. The main limiting factor is the radio and software. The company points out that this information is important, because “space debris is a problem for everyone and can prevent us from launching more satellites.”

The real challenge: start launching now

Sateliot has the authorization of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) for launch up to 500 satellites. Their goal is that before 2030 they will have several hundred satellites in orbit. In 2026, a commercial phase will begin with 500 clients and for the next decade, the goal has been set to have 1,000 million euros in revenue. The figures are very ambitious, however the first Triton satellite will not be launched until early 2027.

Sateliot’s great challenge is not to compete against Starlink in innovation, but to get these satellites up and running. At the moment Starlink has more than 8,000 satellites in orbit. “Not counting China or Russia, more than 95% of the satellites launched today are from Starlink,” says Sanpera. At the planned rate, there is almost a decade of distance between the American company and the Catalan one.

Sateliot’s main problem is that, as is usual in these companies with ambitious plans, They are very late. In 2022, Sanpera assured us that by 2025 they would have 256 satellites in orbit. At the moment they have launched six and by 2026 there will be ten.

In addition to the difficulty and cost of putting these satellites into orbit, the monitoring work also grows. Fortunately, the new Triton satellites carry a lot of AI and are much more robust. “Although we will surely need shifts all day, the efforts of monitoring operations will not grow linearly,” explains Sanpera.

Images | Xataka

In Xataka | Starlink stopped competing with satellite Internet companies a long time ago: now it is going for something much bigger

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